Menu

This will be our last update for awhile. Mr. Smiles is having another surgery and hospital stay, so farm life will be heading to the back burner for awhile while we spend our time caring for our family through this hard time.

We have been scrambling to get things in order around here so that everything will be as low-maintenance as possible during this. Our friends and family are stepping in to help us with everything, which is such a blessing.

Barn Flood Aftermath

It has continued to rain quite a bit, but thankfully no more flood damage. We have dug several new ditches around the property to try to force the water away from buildings and down the mountainside.

We also decided to re-do the barn floor with cement pavers. We bought the first load and have started setting them. We have been putting a few in here and there as we find time in all the busy-ness right now.

Goats

Our friends took the goats and are boarding them for us until this hospital stuff is all over. They will milk them for us, which will take a huge load off of the chores around the farm.

Sheep

We had two sheep we were planning to butcher later this fall, but we decided to go ahead and get one butchered now so that there were less animals to care for, and we didn’t have to try to squeeze it in later if things get rougher. We got 26 lbs of meat, 12 lbs of dog food, and stock bones. We started making the stock yesterday and will can it soon.

Making stock is really easy and it is so delicious and nutritious. We put the bones on a broiling pan and brown them in the oven for about half and hour.

Then we add some veggies: carrots, onions, and celery – these were fresh from the garden!

We put it back in the oven until the veggies are brown. Then we put all the bones and veggies, plus the drippings, and some herbs (some of those were fresh from the garden too!)

into a big pot with some water and simmer it for several hours. Strain it and cool it, then skim the fat and pressure-can the stock. It will be nice to have some more lamb stock in the pantry for this winter. And it is exciting that the only things in it not from our homestead are the peppercorns and the bay leaf.

Chickens

The chickens are in two separate pens, but there isn’t anything we can do about it at this point. We have the upper coop and pen, which has all the hens and pullets, plus the two roosters in it. Those chickens also have access to free range in the barnyard.

Eve and her three chicks are still in the grow-out pen in the barn. It will be a few more weeks before she is done raising them and we can figure out the plan for what to do then. For now, to make it easier to care for everyone, we are training them (or having Eve, their mama hen train them) on a drip waterer. It is much cleaner and doesn’t have to be filled as often. The other pen of chickens is already on a drip waterer, the chicks just hadn’t learned to use one yet.

That will make chicken care as low-maintenance as possible.

Garden

We have been harvesting and putting-up all that is ready to harvest in the garden.

Celery, beet greens, beets, cabbage sprouts, lettuce, spinach, and carrots. We ate a lot fresh, and then froze the extra carrots and celery for soups and stews this winter.

We also got green beans and canned them.

Our first frost is likely to happen during all this craziness, but there isn’t much we can do except take it as it comes. Hopefully we, or our friends who are helping us around the farm, will be around to quickly harvest all the green tomatoes and the last of the beans right before the frost hits so we don’t lose that part of the harvest.

Knitting

I have been, surprisingly, getting a lot of knitting done during this busy time. When I am anxious it makes me feel better to put my hands to some knitting. So whenever I sit down to rest for a few minutes, or am waiting in the waiting room at yet-another doctor’s appointment, or am on the long drive to the specialists’ offices, I have been knitting. I have a pair of socks, a shawl, and a hooded scarf all on the needles right now.

Please keep our family in your prayers. This is Mr. Smiles’ 6th surgery in his very short 2 years of life. Every time we have to do a surgery and hospital stay it is very difficult on him, as well as our whole family. Our experience thus far does make it a little easier to prepare ourselves, and the homestead, to try to make it as easy as possible to get through. But it is still quite a trial for all of us.

I hope to be back to posting later this fall with all things autumn-in-the-Rockies…my favorite time of year!

This will be the last story we share in remembrance of our wonderful LGD, Tundra, who recently died…

Elk are obviously not predators and are not dangerous to our livestock (except a bull elk during rut, or a cow protecting a calf, but inside the barnyard our animals are not effected by those situations). But what they can and will do is jump into the barnyard and steal the hay from the livestock. Deer can as well, but for the most part the mule deer around here are much more cautious and timid than the elk are.

Whenever the elk would come through the property and approach the barnyard fence, investigating the possibility of some free hay, Tundra would charge the fence and bark like crazy, keeping them back from the fence and usually causing them to move along quickly.

Occasionally, we have had curious elk, usually yearlings or two-year-olds, that will just stand about 5 feet from the fence and watch Tundra with their ears perked forward. He would continue to charge the fence and bark and they would watch him with interest. It seemed they knew he couldn’t get them, and that they were interested in what he was and what he was doing. It drove Tundra craaaaazy. He hated it and would get more and more riled that they weren’t afraid of him and moving away.

One of those times the curious elk actually approached the fence. It was standing right at the fence, and Tundra, instead of charging the fence, changed over to jumping up on the fence over and over again barking. The fence was 5 feet high, so as he jumped up over and over again his head and muzzle would just barely get over the top. The elk’s head was bobbing up and down watching the dog jump over and over again.

I heard the barking and looked out the window, seeing the elk standing right at the fence and Tundra jumping repeatedly. I walked through the house to the door to go out and encourage the elk on its way, and as I went out the door I saw the funniest thing happen. Just at the same time that Tundra’s head reached the top of the fence during one of his jumps, the elk’s head raised up to watch him and it leaned forward with its muzzle just enough that they both accidentally touched their noses to each other. It surprised them both so much to have accidentally touched that they both tore off running in opposite directions from each other. It was so funny!

After he got a few strides away from the fence, Tundra realized that the elk had taken off too, and he turned and ran back at the fence barking again, as if to say “Take that! And don’t come back!” And then strutted around acting like he had won the battle and the whole running-frightened-from-the-surprising-touch hadn’t happened at all. It was so hilarious!

I told him he was a good dog and didn’t let on that I knew his secret. 😉

Share this:

Like this:

Can you believe it is August!? Where did July go? Actually, July felt long, and short to us. Long days, short month. That is life – long days, short years.

We had a very chilly day this week for August, it didn’t get above 60F, and the night was cold, which was surprising. But then it went back up to warmer again. We continue to get a lot of rain. We are digging ditches and trying to divert the water to keep another flood from happening as happened last week. We are still deciding what to do about the barn flooring. Paving stones definitely seem like the ideal option, just not sure if we can pull it off right now or not.

Garden

The garden continues to be the main topic of conversation this time of year. It is doing beautifully and we continue to harvest from it. Here is a picture comparison of the garden now, compared to earlier in the year.

The carrot harvest has started. We tried a new variety this year and were not happy with it compared to the variety we did last year. It did not germinate as well, several of the plants went to seed even though it is their first year, the carrots seem to go from under-ripe to over-ripe very quickly which makes harvesting timing hard, and they have very deep cracks in them that are hard to clean out. So we will not be doing Royal Chantenay next year and will instead go back to St. Valery, which we love. But nonetheless, we are harvesting them and enjoying eating them fresh as well as freezing them for the winter.

Carrot section of the garden, with celery in the front of the photo

The tomato plants are huge and there are a lot of green tomatoes on them and growing.

The peas are growing really well this year, which has not been the case previous years. We have been eating them fresh so much and enjoying them that way that we have not been able to put any away for the winter.

The herbs are doing well both in the main garden and in the container herb garden.

We have tons of purple beans and purple bean flowers on, and the shelling beans climbing up the new arch and doing great as well. We are discussing adding another arch or two next year.

A wonderful bountiful garden this year!

We had the opportunity to harvest some crabapples and are going to make them into jelly. My favorite flavor of jelly by far!

We took 8 different veggie entries to the fair this year and did quite well with them – got a couple first places, a second, and a couple third…happy with that! The kids’ 4H projects did very well at fair and will compete at state. And we also entered a few items in the open class and we got several ribbons from those. Overall an excellent County Fair experience this year.

Knitting

I finished the “fast project” pair of striped socks that I started after my sweater. I am really happy with how they turned out. The self-striping yarn almost matched itself perfectly from one skein to the other.

Chickens

The roosters are settling pretty well with the hens, although we have had some trouble with one of them trying to get aggressive with us humans. If that continues it will be easy to choose which one will be our breeding roo – we don’t keep aggressive roosters.

I will leave you with a couple of cute pictures…first, our indoor kitty watching our barn cat through the window.

And Anya, our year-old LGD, laying on top of the compost pile looking oh-so-cute. This continues to be her favorite game during our training sessions lately – she gets on top of the pile, digs, rolls down the side, repeats it, and then eventually just lays on top. With her face like that she looks very puppy-ish to me. It is sometimes hard to remind myself she is still a puppy since she is over 85 lbs now.

Like this:

What started out as a rainstorm the other day turned into a gully-washer. The rain was coming down so fast and hard that the gutters couldn’t even hold it and there were waterfalls coming off every roof. Add to that the fact that we live on a mountainside, and thus all the water up the mountain was coming at us. We ended up with flooding in the barn and in the mud room in our house.

None of the animals were harmed – we got up to the barn in time to find the mama hen and baby chicks standing in 2 inches of rising water, and we quickly moved them to “higher ground.” Thankfully, all our hay is up in lofts, so it didn’t get damaged either. But we had about 6 inches of standing water in the barn at the high point of it all. And about 3 inches of water in our mud room.

During the chaos I was too busy trying to deal with everything to take pics, but as everything started receding I got some photos.

That dog crate is up on 2x4s, and the wood floor under the 2x4s has 2×4 framing under it sitting on the dirt ground…so you have some perspective.

You can see the water line on the walls.

The mud room floor is tile, and we were able to vacuum the water out quickly with a shop vac, so there wasn’t damage there, just some water marks to parts of the walls.

The stalls are just dirt floor, and then there are sections of the barn floor that are cement paving stones, and sections that are wood flooring. 5 years of hay has been falling through the cracks in the wood floor, so we had to rip up all that floor in order to clean out all the wet hay and prevent mold.

It took hours to get everything dealt with and start the drying process.

We are now deciding what to do with the barn floor…leave it dirt, put down the wood again (which would be very difficult), or get paving stones and do the whole floor in paving stones.

Share this:

Like this:

It has been a hard week. The chicken accident was upsetting, and then the death of our LGD, Tundra, has knocked the wind out of all of our sails. But despite that, we are trying to get up and keep going and work on what needs working on.

Garden

The garden is beautiful and bountiful. We will be entering some of the awesome veg from it into the county fair this week. Last year our carrots won first place at fair, which makes us pretty happy because we are growing our garden at a much higher elevation and harsher climate than most all of the competitors at our county fair. This year we will be entering more than just carrots and we will see how it goes.

I made and froze some green base this week since we had an over-abundance of spinach. Green base is orange juice blended with spinach in a food processor or blender. We use it in our smoothies. About 3 times a week we have goat’s milk kefir smoothies for our morning snack. Our favorite recipe is bananas, mango, green base, raspberries, blackberries, and kefir. During the growing season we use fresh spinach from the garden to make the green base, but in the winter I use frozen green base that I make and freeze in ice cube trays during the summer. It is nice to get some of that put into the freezer for later.

Anya

Our one-year-old LGD pup has continued to do well with her training since the chicken accident. While Tundra’s absence leaves a hole in the barnyard, Anya’s presence does somewhat soothe that pain and fill the hole a little, especially when she is being silly and cute and we can’t help but smile at her. The other day she got on top of the compost heap, dug a little, and then rolled down the side of the heap sideways, then ran back up and did it again. She just kept rolling down the side like a little kid playing. Then she dug herself a nest on top, and plopped down in it. It was so cute.

As hard as it is to lose Tundra, it is very relieving to have Anya and know that our livestock are still going to be safe and protected. We really can’t keep livestock up here in the mountains without something to protect them.

Goats

The new goats, Fern and Clover, are settling well and their milk production has actually gone up quite a bit from the first stressful days of them being here. Clover is definitely more laid back, and Fern is kind of high strung. We are happy to have fresh milk again, and made mozzarella this week for our Friday-night-homemade-pizza-and-a-movie tradition.

Chickens

And then there were two…we butchered another cockerel and are down to only two now. We put them both out with the flock of girls and will watch them in the coming weeks to see which one we like better to keep as our breeding roo. If they can get along and not beat up the girls too much we might keep them both.

We now have three pullets laying. We get two little green eggs and one little brown one, in addition to the hens’ larger eggs each day.

Sheep

The weaning nose rings worked and about 8 days after we put them into the lambs’ noses, the ewes’ udders were dried up and we could take the rings out of the lambs’ noses. The lambs are none the worse for the wear and all is well. We really like using those for our weaning. Now the ewes can gain some weight and be ready for breeding season late this fall.

Like this:

Post navigation

Welcome to Willow Creek Farm!

We are happy to have you visiting us!
I am wife to an amazing man ("Mountain Man") for 17 years now. We have been blessed with 5 children. Two girls: "Sunshine" (12) and "Little Miss" (10). And three boys: "Young Man" (14), "Braveheart" (8), and "Mr. Smiles" (1).
I enjoy being a wife and homemaker, homeschooling mom, farm girl, and helping my husband run our custom fiber processing mill.
In this blog we are sharing what we learn as we build and run our little homestead at high-altitude to provide natural, home-raised food for our family.

Come walk with us through the ups and downs of family farming in the Rocky Mountains!